Page 1
IConc!: “My Footsteps In British Columbia” By Issei Pioneer Y. Yamaga
of the situation. There was a 1 .and the. girls’ endurance hit scholar) “Do Know Labor" which
fruit cannery in Haney •where bottom and they all voted for was published in Japan in .1948
nearly
one hundred Japanese a sitdown strike. The girls came and has sold 5000 copies.
women were employed. They to me asking for help? I lost no
In concluding* 1 shall mention
worked by piecework. The rate time calling the Labor Depart how 1 earned my daily
per dozen was cheaper than the ment who sent an inspector im and butter. 1 bought .10
other canneries. The girls worked mediately and settled that the of bushland in Hanev B.C. .and
so hard that an average girl employer will pay the original
farming,
earned $4.00 a day which was price. The girls went back to We enjoyed
the first
a men’s wage in those days, The work.
I few venrs as there were not.
hvere
employer thought that he was
•ies on the market.
1 had helped the strike leaders
paying too much and cut the rate as an interpreter and I began to However, during World War I
so that girls made about $3.00 take 'particular interest in the the strawberry price climbed up
a day. Girls wanted $4.00 a day labor problems which prompted to 2.1c per pound and all the
and worked harder than ever me to study labor. It also mo berry growers made a fortune
like crazy and averaged $4.00. tivated me to translate Dr. which lured people to strawberry
’rates in the same job
(an
American
labor farming from all over the. coast.
1 May employers took advantage The employer cut the rate again Myer’s
^MPbOYMEN'1
.anti-oriental
f Beside?1*
‘ our rising
IKniovcmen^ to
1 Know' that theii’
gge^e non worked under quite
if^1' thei‘circumstances from the
gauierem
Japanese never
K» «ive» an? .garment
K
the B.C. «ast, Jw™^
rapidly
and berry tonnage year after
year so that in 1926 Governmen
tal survey shows 1969 tons of
strawberry and 2366 tons of
raspberry produced in B.C. and
there were 450 Japanese farmers
owning* .1600 acres ot land in
mainland (192S surthe local
to
markets can not begin to con
sume this large tonnage. As the
result unavoidable cut throat
competition started among growi
/Cunt,
on
l'» ce
^
^i|lllllllllli>IliiHllllililllitllliilllllllillliilliiiil>liliil>iilli>llllllii>>>lllllillIli>>tilll>IIIIIiIliilliilillilll>iliIlllllllliI>lllli>llllilliiilllillliiilllim
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE
The Dctu Canadian
“A CHILD IN PRISON
GAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1972
Toronto. Ont.
iiiiiiiiiiiHiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiHHiiiiHiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin^
Land Reform
In Vietnam
First Asian Canadian Photo & Art
Exhibition Proves Great Success
tish Columbia and was open to the general public
By C. R. CHIBA
By S. I. HAYAKAWA
throughout the week.
President, S.F. State College
VANCOUVER. — “We know we’ve got someth
Several hundred visitors, mostly Asian Cana
Until recently most South Vietnamese peasants were tenant ing that is ours, and ours only”, said one Asian
dians (first, second, third and fourth generation
Ifarmers. Their resentment of avaricious landlords was a continuing Canadian at the history making Asian Canadian
Japanese
and Chinese) attended the exhibit.-A oung
|source of discontent — a discontent that was skillfully exploited Experience — Photo and Art Exhibition. “Now
spent months
Japanese and Chinese
3by the Viet Cong to turn village people against the government.
that we’ve had a taste, we’ll have to make someth- preparing for the exhibition and voluntarily sacrig
Today much of this has changed. In March 1970 President ing of it that will last.”
ficed usual class time to serve as receptionists and
|Nguyen Van Thieu signed the Land-to-the-Tiller” law passed by
(March 13 — guides for those attending who wanted further
The exhibit took place recently
:
Sthe National Assembly. This legislation transfers ownership of
18, 1972) in the gallery of the Student Union explanations about the photographs and art.
more than two and a quarter million acres .of rice land to tenant
Approximately 150 carefully finished and mount
Building on the campus of the University of Brifarmers.
ed photos were presented. All
k
Landowners, who traditionally received one-third to one-half
were developed and/or reproduced
Oof the crop as rent, are being compensated: 20 per cent in cash
bv the students themselves. The
Sand the rest in bonds payable with 10 pel* cent interest in equal
photographs
Japanese
NEW YORK. — Former Beatle they wanted to seek expungement
h installments over an 8-year period. The new owners may not
were set apart from those of the
III transfer or encumber their land for 15 years. It must remain in the John Lennon and his wife, Yoko ' of a marijuana conviction in
Chinese Canadian community so
Ono, have won a month’s delay • Britain from Lennon’s record
S possession of those who till it.
more
that, the viewer
^j|
Through November 1971 ovex’ 350,000 farm families have been in a deportation proceeding on and to clear up Yoko’s child readily see the definite parallels
S issued titles to over one million acres of land. It is expected that charges their visas have expired. ' custody matter.
in the historical developments of
The Lennons had sought a | Hearing has been delayed until
III by spring 1973, 800,000 former’ tenant farmers will have become
both communities. The exhibi
III owners. Furthermore, the government has begun a program to two-month adjournment because ; Apr. 18.
tion was chronologically ordered
g provide titles to the Montagnards for lands traditionally claimed
with pictures dating from pre
® by them. This program will ultimately involve 1,400 Montagnard Japanese Afraid Despite High Living Standard
sent, back to several years be
B villages and 500,000 acres of land.
fore the turn of the century.
TOKYO. — Despite the growth the first time in Japan.
^
Land reform has been an issue in Vietnam for a long time. in recent years in annual
------ , --------j
Asked
about
their
living
con“The photos,” said one onwages,
“ Previous efforts in this direction had foundered through misman- many Japanese workers still feel I ditions, 49./ per cent replied that •looker, “especially those taken
agement and the lack of will to see it through. The present pro- that their lives are insecure, ac they were not worried about sub recently by young Japanese and
S gram, however, shows considerably more promise for two reasons. cording to a survey disclosed by sistence but added they could Chinese
Canadian
men
and
I 1First,
designed ana
and1 wen
well receiver.
received ^^ Welfare Ministry,
irti, it appears to be
oe exceptionally well designea
not buy anything" valuable.
women, impressed me not as the
s For this, part of the credit can be given to two Americans, Dr.
Others (27.1 per cent) said usual sngarsweqt polaroid varie
The Ministry’s report on the
Il Roy Prosterman of the University of Washington Law School and conditions and consciousness of they
in ty that one is so accustomed to
not
indulge
could
Robert L. Coate, San Francisco businessman and former California the Japanese in fiscal 1971 also luxuries but only in necessities,
seeing these days, but as real
g Democratic chairman. Prosterman helped to shape the final form revealed that many persons over
per
cent
of
those
attempts
at self-expression with
Only 3.2
the legislation. Coate did much of the lobbying that got it 50 feel they cannot live on their polled said they believed they in a definite cultural context.”
J through the assembly.
Prof. Ronald Tanaka of the
live “better than the average.”
income alone.
t|
Dr. Clark Kerr, former president of the University of CaliforBut 3.5 per cent said their life U.B.C. English Department said,
About 60,000 were picked at
“What is truly unique about
rua and chairman of the National Committee for a Political Set- random across the country last was “bare existence” and it
| dement in Vietnam, describes the program as “revolutionary” in June for the suiwey conducted would collapse if things continue this exhibition is that for the
| that it gives “the bulk of South Vietnam’s farm land immediately by the- Ministry’s statistic and as they are today.
first time Japanese and Chinese
the several million Vietnamese now farming the land'.” It is, he research bureau.
The suiwey said 16.5 per cent Canadians are looking to and ad
eliex es, "probably the most important thing that’s happened yet
The suiwey showed that the in felt their living conditions were dressing their own Asian com
I ietnam.”
come per family composed of an “worse than the average.” They munities.” Prof. Tanaka went on
. ^he second reason the program is promising is that President average of 3.6 persons rose to replied they were barely able to to say, “They are doing this with
a
^eu, himself more at home in the country than in Saigon, has 1,388,000 yen in 1971, up to 16.8 subsist.
the realization in mind, that if
The poll also revealed that the their art is to have any value
it the highest priority and is determined to carry it through, per cent over the previous year.
living
conditions of those in the at all, it will be the people who
'sn betore this legislation was enacted, the government had
The figure indicated a steady
^ade the politically difficult decision to raise the official price of increase in the average annual low bracket were getting better, will determine whether an ar
pee in the cities, thereby giving the peasant incentive to progress income since 1969 when the 1,- while those of in the higher tist is in fact an artist, who
speaks to, speaks for and speaks
i-om subsistence farming to production for the market.
000,000 yen mark was topped for bracket have not improved.
with
the community — the Asian
increased security, better distribution of fertilizer and
Of the 5600 male workers over
the introduction of “miracle” high-yield rice, and crop
50 years of age, more than half Canadian community.”
On Friday, the second last day
Versification already under way, the Land-to-the-Tiller program
(51.5 per cent) said they felt
of the exhibition, Asian Cana
y^enth- came at just the right time to handsomely increase the
VANCOLTER. — A 41-year- their income and assets alone
dian poets gathered to articulate
A1^6 in his newly-acquired land.
old city man was crushed to would not be enough to keep
“
l!le -oregoing is what I have been told and what I have death recently in an a.uto-pedes- them alive when they grow old. what it is exactly, to be Asian
^a. How '.s the program actually progressing? And how would
The survey said 73.6 per cent Canadian.” They were received
trian accident.
with an enthusiastic and positive
to^^i^ ^e me’ A'ho doesn’t know beans about farming, be able
Dead is Osamu Miyagawa, of of them expected financial help
response, by an audience compos
’* ' "^^ I can do is tell the reader what I saw.
from their children.
1849 Robson.
Mr c aS ?ken by car to the Mekong Delta around My Tho by
The survey also disclosed that ed mainly of Japanese and Chi
He was killed when he walked
^' Huang of the Chinese (Taiwan) Agricultural Technical behind a truck stopped for a only 22.9 per cent among the j nese Canadians. Some of the
poets present were; Sean Gunn,
train on Alexander at Columbia. aged said they expected financial
Shigeru Uyeyama and Ron Ta
^•■p6 ^^ en^e£s fields of rice at all stages of development,
Police said he was crushed in aid from national and local pu naka.
hsS-^11 pIants 35 wel1 ^ fieWs ready for harvesting or already
a. minor collision betw een the blic entities in. the form of pen
^ted. There were fruit orchards and vegetables in every availsions or annuities.
(Cont. on Page 8)
truck and a car behind it.
Move To Oust John & Yoko Delayed
J.C. Man Crushed
(Continued on Page 8)
of the situation. There was a 1 .and the. girls’ endurance hit scholar) “Do Know Labor" which
fruit cannery in Haney •where bottom and they all voted for was published in Japan in .1948
nearly
one hundred Japanese a sitdown strike. The girls came and has sold 5000 copies.
women were employed. They to me asking for help? I lost no
In concluding* 1 shall mention
worked by piecework. The rate time calling the Labor Depart how 1 earned my daily
per dozen was cheaper than the ment who sent an inspector im and butter. 1 bought .10
other canneries. The girls worked mediately and settled that the of bushland in Hanev B.C. .and
so hard that an average girl employer will pay the original
farming,
earned $4.00 a day which was price. The girls went back to We enjoyed
the first
a men’s wage in those days, The work.
I few venrs as there were not.
hvere
employer thought that he was
•ies on the market.
1 had helped the strike leaders
paying too much and cut the rate as an interpreter and I began to However, during World War I
so that girls made about $3.00 take 'particular interest in the the strawberry price climbed up
a day. Girls wanted $4.00 a day labor problems which prompted to 2.1c per pound and all the
and worked harder than ever me to study labor. It also mo berry growers made a fortune
like crazy and averaged $4.00. tivated me to translate Dr. which lured people to strawberry
’rates in the same job
(an
American
labor farming from all over the. coast.
1 May employers took advantage The employer cut the rate again Myer’s
^MPbOYMEN'1
.anti-oriental
f Beside?1*
‘ our rising
IKniovcmen^ to
1 Know' that theii’
gge^e non worked under quite
if^1' thei‘circumstances from the
gauierem
Japanese never
K» «ive» an? .garment
K
the B.C. «ast, Jw™^
rapidly
and berry tonnage year after
year so that in 1926 Governmen
tal survey shows 1969 tons of
strawberry and 2366 tons of
raspberry produced in B.C. and
there were 450 Japanese farmers
owning* .1600 acres ot land in
mainland (192S surthe local
to
markets can not begin to con
sume this large tonnage. As the
result unavoidable cut throat
competition started among growi
/Cunt,
on
l'» ce
^
^i|lllllllllli>IliiHllllililllitllliilllllllillliilliiiil>liliil>iilli>llllllii>>>lllllillIli>>tilll>IIIIIiIliilliilillilll>iliIlllllllliI>lllli>llllilliiilllillliiilllim
“SUKIYAKI”
Practical Japanese
Cookbook $1.65
WITH POSTAGE
The Dctu Canadian
“A CHILD IN PRISON
GAMP”
Bv SHIZUYE
TAKASHIMA
$7.95 WITH POSTAGE
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin
FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1972
Toronto. Ont.
iiiiiiiiiiiHiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiHHiiiiHiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin^
Land Reform
In Vietnam
First Asian Canadian Photo & Art
Exhibition Proves Great Success
tish Columbia and was open to the general public
By C. R. CHIBA
By S. I. HAYAKAWA
throughout the week.
President, S.F. State College
VANCOUVER. — “We know we’ve got someth
Several hundred visitors, mostly Asian Cana
Until recently most South Vietnamese peasants were tenant ing that is ours, and ours only”, said one Asian
dians (first, second, third and fourth generation
Ifarmers. Their resentment of avaricious landlords was a continuing Canadian at the history making Asian Canadian
Japanese
and Chinese) attended the exhibit.-A oung
|source of discontent — a discontent that was skillfully exploited Experience — Photo and Art Exhibition. “Now
spent months
Japanese and Chinese
3by the Viet Cong to turn village people against the government.
that we’ve had a taste, we’ll have to make someth- preparing for the exhibition and voluntarily sacrig
Today much of this has changed. In March 1970 President ing of it that will last.”
ficed usual class time to serve as receptionists and
|Nguyen Van Thieu signed the Land-to-the-Tiller” law passed by
(March 13 — guides for those attending who wanted further
The exhibit took place recently
:
Sthe National Assembly. This legislation transfers ownership of
18, 1972) in the gallery of the Student Union explanations about the photographs and art.
more than two and a quarter million acres .of rice land to tenant
Approximately 150 carefully finished and mount
Building on the campus of the University of Brifarmers.
ed photos were presented. All
k
Landowners, who traditionally received one-third to one-half
were developed and/or reproduced
Oof the crop as rent, are being compensated: 20 per cent in cash
bv the students themselves. The
Sand the rest in bonds payable with 10 pel* cent interest in equal
photographs
Japanese
NEW YORK. — Former Beatle they wanted to seek expungement
h installments over an 8-year period. The new owners may not
were set apart from those of the
III transfer or encumber their land for 15 years. It must remain in the John Lennon and his wife, Yoko ' of a marijuana conviction in
Chinese Canadian community so
Ono, have won a month’s delay • Britain from Lennon’s record
S possession of those who till it.
more
that, the viewer
^j|
Through November 1971 ovex’ 350,000 farm families have been in a deportation proceeding on and to clear up Yoko’s child readily see the definite parallels
S issued titles to over one million acres of land. It is expected that charges their visas have expired. ' custody matter.
in the historical developments of
The Lennons had sought a | Hearing has been delayed until
III by spring 1973, 800,000 former’ tenant farmers will have become
both communities. The exhibi
III owners. Furthermore, the government has begun a program to two-month adjournment because ; Apr. 18.
tion was chronologically ordered
g provide titles to the Montagnards for lands traditionally claimed
with pictures dating from pre
® by them. This program will ultimately involve 1,400 Montagnard Japanese Afraid Despite High Living Standard
sent, back to several years be
B villages and 500,000 acres of land.
fore the turn of the century.
TOKYO. — Despite the growth the first time in Japan.
^
Land reform has been an issue in Vietnam for a long time. in recent years in annual
------ , --------j
Asked
about
their
living
con“The photos,” said one onwages,
“ Previous efforts in this direction had foundered through misman- many Japanese workers still feel I ditions, 49./ per cent replied that •looker, “especially those taken
agement and the lack of will to see it through. The present pro- that their lives are insecure, ac they were not worried about sub recently by young Japanese and
S gram, however, shows considerably more promise for two reasons. cording to a survey disclosed by sistence but added they could Chinese
Canadian
men
and
I 1First,
designed ana
and1 wen
well receiver.
received ^^ Welfare Ministry,
irti, it appears to be
oe exceptionally well designea
not buy anything" valuable.
women, impressed me not as the
s For this, part of the credit can be given to two Americans, Dr.
Others (27.1 per cent) said usual sngarsweqt polaroid varie
The Ministry’s report on the
Il Roy Prosterman of the University of Washington Law School and conditions and consciousness of they
in ty that one is so accustomed to
not
indulge
could
Robert L. Coate, San Francisco businessman and former California the Japanese in fiscal 1971 also luxuries but only in necessities,
seeing these days, but as real
g Democratic chairman. Prosterman helped to shape the final form revealed that many persons over
per
cent
of
those
attempts
at self-expression with
Only 3.2
the legislation. Coate did much of the lobbying that got it 50 feel they cannot live on their polled said they believed they in a definite cultural context.”
J through the assembly.
Prof. Ronald Tanaka of the
live “better than the average.”
income alone.
t|
Dr. Clark Kerr, former president of the University of CaliforBut 3.5 per cent said their life U.B.C. English Department said,
About 60,000 were picked at
“What is truly unique about
rua and chairman of the National Committee for a Political Set- random across the country last was “bare existence” and it
| dement in Vietnam, describes the program as “revolutionary” in June for the suiwey conducted would collapse if things continue this exhibition is that for the
| that it gives “the bulk of South Vietnam’s farm land immediately by the- Ministry’s statistic and as they are today.
first time Japanese and Chinese
the several million Vietnamese now farming the land'.” It is, he research bureau.
The suiwey said 16.5 per cent Canadians are looking to and ad
eliex es, "probably the most important thing that’s happened yet
The suiwey showed that the in felt their living conditions were dressing their own Asian com
I ietnam.”
come per family composed of an “worse than the average.” They munities.” Prof. Tanaka went on
. ^he second reason the program is promising is that President average of 3.6 persons rose to replied they were barely able to to say, “They are doing this with
a
^eu, himself more at home in the country than in Saigon, has 1,388,000 yen in 1971, up to 16.8 subsist.
the realization in mind, that if
The poll also revealed that the their art is to have any value
it the highest priority and is determined to carry it through, per cent over the previous year.
living
conditions of those in the at all, it will be the people who
'sn betore this legislation was enacted, the government had
The figure indicated a steady
^ade the politically difficult decision to raise the official price of increase in the average annual low bracket were getting better, will determine whether an ar
pee in the cities, thereby giving the peasant incentive to progress income since 1969 when the 1,- while those of in the higher tist is in fact an artist, who
speaks to, speaks for and speaks
i-om subsistence farming to production for the market.
000,000 yen mark was topped for bracket have not improved.
with
the community — the Asian
increased security, better distribution of fertilizer and
Of the 5600 male workers over
the introduction of “miracle” high-yield rice, and crop
50 years of age, more than half Canadian community.”
On Friday, the second last day
Versification already under way, the Land-to-the-Tiller program
(51.5 per cent) said they felt
of the exhibition, Asian Cana
y^enth- came at just the right time to handsomely increase the
VANCOLTER. — A 41-year- their income and assets alone
dian poets gathered to articulate
A1^6 in his newly-acquired land.
old city man was crushed to would not be enough to keep
“
l!le -oregoing is what I have been told and what I have death recently in an a.uto-pedes- them alive when they grow old. what it is exactly, to be Asian
^a. How '.s the program actually progressing? And how would
The survey said 73.6 per cent Canadian.” They were received
trian accident.
with an enthusiastic and positive
to^^i^ ^e me’ A'ho doesn’t know beans about farming, be able
Dead is Osamu Miyagawa, of of them expected financial help
response, by an audience compos
’* ' "^^ I can do is tell the reader what I saw.
from their children.
1849 Robson.
Mr c aS ?ken by car to the Mekong Delta around My Tho by
The survey also disclosed that ed mainly of Japanese and Chi
He was killed when he walked
^' Huang of the Chinese (Taiwan) Agricultural Technical behind a truck stopped for a only 22.9 per cent among the j nese Canadians. Some of the
poets present were; Sean Gunn,
train on Alexander at Columbia. aged said they expected financial
Shigeru Uyeyama and Ron Ta
^•■p6 ^^ en^e£s fields of rice at all stages of development,
Police said he was crushed in aid from national and local pu naka.
hsS-^11 pIants 35 wel1 ^ fieWs ready for harvesting or already
a. minor collision betw een the blic entities in. the form of pen
^ted. There were fruit orchards and vegetables in every availsions or annuities.
(Cont. on Page 8)
truck and a car behind it.
Move To Oust John & Yoko Delayed
J.C. Man Crushed
(Continued on Page 8)
Page 2
PAGE 2
j^ E W
Fridas
N.C. Editor Kei Tsumura To Paris
Coaching All-Canada Karate Team
TORON IO — New Canadian dan Chitorvu;
Sam
Moledzki, *
Editor, Kei C. Tsumura. 5th-dan IsL-dan Shitorvu
Itosukai; Hal
Shitorvu Itosukai, left here for Henschel, Ist-dan Chitorvu;
RoEurope this week to coach the cky Cornachio, 1 sl-dan. Chitorvu;
19/2 All Canada Karate Team Bill Carr, Ist-dan. Chitorvu: and
nt the .1972 World Karate Cham- David M.anara, Ist-dan, Shitorvu
pionships to be held in
France.
a nd
Tsumura, who instructs at and
The
team
crates three Shitorvu Itosukai
will be managed by Mas T suruo- Karate
schools in Toronto, will
ka
7th-dan
Chitorvu.
Team
irom his European tour
members are:
3rd-। to open
Toronto Bui
Youth Bowling Tournament
TORONTO.
On March 11 Adult:
19/2,
the
Toronto
Buddhist; . Men Sam Omori _ — .
Church Youth Department held!
Girl Sakae Goto —__
a bowling tournament for the High Single:
Sunday School children, sponsor 10 years ^& Under:
6
ed by Toronto Sangha and Dana. |
Boy Donald Kawaguchi 1ST
The event took place at the
Girl Eelinor Goto -Dufferin Plaza Bowling Alley. 11 to 13 years:
Approximately seventy children
Boy Bruce Bando — — _ lw 8
accompanied by their parents
Girl June Tamaki — attended.
14 to 20 years:
After tallying up the bowling
boy
Kawaguchi
scores, supper, presentation of
Taguchi —
ns
trophies, and' a game of bingo
followed, as the_ scene shifted to Lowest Score:
Girl Kim Nagasuye —
the Toronto Buddhist Social Hall.
di
Boy
Ian
Izukawa
—
The following names are the
winners of each of the categ'ories. Dummy Score:
Girl Pamela Yoshida
81
Double Events:
Boy
Larry Suyama — 130
10 years & Under:
Team Champion:
Gary Tehara -------- 358
Kenny Komori
Gir] Denise Tsuruoka — 309
Jane
Tamura
11 to 13 years
s
hay
Goto
Boy Wayne Uyeda-------- 314
Kunio Suyama
Julie Suyama — — 264
Mike Uyeda
14 to 20 years:
Boy Steven Isozaki-------- 439
Debbie Suyama — — 381
Martial Arts Centre For Steveston
RICHMOND, 13.C. — The onlv
are simple linoleum, the walls
thing missing is a smiling Geiare a basic white, just as one
sha.
would expect of the architectural
But maybe it’s better there style.
aren’t any in the spanking’ new
In the centre of the U-shaped,
building in Steveston, because if building is a fenced-in courtyard,
anybody tried any funny stuff,
ited by a wooden bridge
the Geisha, would most likely over a
dry pond. Many of the
pulverise the amorous attacker shrubs
around the building and
with a judothrow or a bamboo in the
courtyard arc Japanese,
kendo shinai in the face.
There are even some bamboo
J he Martial Arts Centre, which
opened recently, is an extension
im nd sea pi ng’ costs accounted
of the Steveston
Community for a $17,000 chunk out of the
Centre.
centre’s $225.,000 cost.
It features two large, halls, one
The 10,000 square foot cen- 5 th-dan
Tsumura
specially designed for judo claswill
immediately
relieve
Thos. T. Onizui
ses and the other in which kenon
the
overworked rate centre to be located in the
Jo, the feudal Japanese art of Steveston
BARRISTER. SOL1C
Community centre next Islington and Kipling area, sometime in May.
introduced bv
i
NOTARY PU
war- door on Moncton.
rior masters of swordsmanship.
5th-dan
karate
instructor
121 RICHMOND
W.
director Fr.an Weaver
Samurai — will be taught.
Tsumura,
studied
in
Japan
in
that there are about 1,600
363-5002
691-3388 (Res.) *
It also features an architec members in the recreation pro 1969 under Sakagami Sensei,
9th-dan master and Head of the
tural style that is so convincim’! v
about 1,000 Of which
jl
.... .............................
, ..........
Shitorvu
Itosukai School Head
‘at a visitor feels like under 16.
quarters at Yokohama. .Presently | KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C. |
shoes oft once inside
Judo
have
been
runthe door.
Tsumura is the highest ranking
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
ning three and n half hours a
NOTARY PUBLIC
member
of
this
school
in
Canada.
Flanked by the two St
night Monday through Thurs2 Carlton St., Toronto
There are four main styles of
foot halls.
day. with 120 juniors, 40 sen5
Ro cm ISG5
karate in Japan: Goju; Wado;
Japanese-style iors and 25 black belts.
3
356-6388
293-4281 (Res. ■
Shotokan; and Shitorvu,
roof are i
rooihs, meetKendo cla
given every
ing- rooms
Alter the Baris tourney, Tsu
’t'k night and Sunday afterplans
to visit former
simple, the floor. noon, and about 50 junior:s and mura.
pupils, who have opened up their
RES. 231-0S63
BUS. 783-4261
30 adults are enrolled.
11
Ivy Lea Cres.
own schools in Paris, Amsterdam
3101 Bathurst St
In additioni, says Miss Weaver, and London.
JAPANESE
there are 75’ other activities at
MRS. SATOKO SATO
the
centre.
all the way from
RESTAURANT
Ail types of insurance
tinv tot tumbling to Japanese
MICHI"
Toronto 133. Ont
Phone 863-9519
.
iWH
sukiyaki
lawni
Reservations: 366-2164
Seven Days A Week
460 Dundas St. West,
Toronto, Ont.
KEG NEWS
Richmond’s recreation administrator D. G. Harwood
TORONTO NISEI MIXED MAJOR 5-PIN ■
BOWLING LEAGUE'
the centre’s design, and the
February
27,
1972.
popularit
of the two Japanese MEN:
.........
Willie Tateishi
(306)
arts of s elf defence, are attribuMike Obrovat:
814
San~o Sasaki
806
table in part to the hig’h number
Fred Morivama SOO
Peter Moura
797 (315)
of
iff in the SteMartin Hollv
794 (333)
765 (31S)
nlthoug-h more
753
than half the ce litre’s members
Armata
745
LADIES: Jov Chow
come from outsid e Steveston.
792 (296)
Tdl Sheppard
:e
Oda
One of Richmond's 1971 cen
s
w
tennial projects, the centre was
a
financed with a $95,000 pledge
March 5, 1972
IlOm the SteVOston
MEN:
s
(356)
Society, 88/, (000 from the muOl
795,
nicipnlity
of
Richmond.
7^6
and
.n hohv
$42,300 from the federal and
Sasaki ‘
Ohashi
19
provincial centennial funds.
Shinmoto
It
was
designed
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
TORONTO
Tosh Nishijima
421-3374
ffe//</inn ^A viM^cnS ^en/^ -
B
’ 627 BAY ST., TORONTO
It is a good policv to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Co/MUi!
William Wales Ltd. ;
Insurance Agents ’
S
J
CROWN LIFT
2 Carlton St. 10th flwi
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-468;
Say it with flowers!
SHARON'S FLORIST
Cm-WIDS OEUVEST
Ssss^
Peter Sasaki
Bns: HO. 6-2041
Res: HD.
942 PAPE
6-7
AVE., TORONTO
OSCAR'S
Kashino &
Weinberg
SPORT SHOP
215 Victoria St.
SKI
SPECIALIST
LADIES: C
March
MEN:
Arlene O.
Lorraine <
Terry Cic
12,
A
S.
673
665
640
Toronto
1201 Bloor Street V» esl
363-7441
LE. 2-4267
i
A
* Weekly Saturday Departures from Vancouver
* Includes Twin shr
hotel accommodation, siehtsecin
-Most .Meal . Airfare. Service Charge and Grat nit
Room and open return at additional char
e or Write for Color Brochure and Further
1972
K. iwata Travel Service
Je
a
NISEI OWNED
"Covering Ontario"
KAMPA!
TOUR
16-day group four of Orient $999.00
S5S (324)
SOO
LADIES: NT
19
£
Room 301
l~
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
EAVESTROUGHING
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHi
bv
Arnulf H. Petzold who spent
a number of
practising in
Japan before moving to Canada,
and it's the irst such centre in
FLAT ROOFS
PRINTING ®ja®i
/
LADIES: Cc-dv G<
Lorraine <
ia
Arlene ~O
•05
Ph: 36S-9934
8S9 Dundas St
Toronto. Ont.
V ancouver
w.
254-5101
1115 East Hastings
Vancouver 6. B-G
1
j^ E W
Fridas
N.C. Editor Kei Tsumura To Paris
Coaching All-Canada Karate Team
TORON IO — New Canadian dan Chitorvu;
Sam
Moledzki, *
Editor, Kei C. Tsumura. 5th-dan IsL-dan Shitorvu
Itosukai; Hal
Shitorvu Itosukai, left here for Henschel, Ist-dan Chitorvu;
RoEurope this week to coach the cky Cornachio, 1 sl-dan. Chitorvu;
19/2 All Canada Karate Team Bill Carr, Ist-dan. Chitorvu: and
nt the .1972 World Karate Cham- David M.anara, Ist-dan, Shitorvu
pionships to be held in
France.
a nd
Tsumura, who instructs at and
The
team
crates three Shitorvu Itosukai
will be managed by Mas T suruo- Karate
schools in Toronto, will
ka
7th-dan
Chitorvu.
Team
irom his European tour
members are:
3rd-। to open
Toronto Bui
Youth Bowling Tournament
TORONTO.
On March 11 Adult:
19/2,
the
Toronto
Buddhist; . Men Sam Omori _ — .
Church Youth Department held!
Girl Sakae Goto —__
a bowling tournament for the High Single:
Sunday School children, sponsor 10 years ^& Under:
6
ed by Toronto Sangha and Dana. |
Boy Donald Kawaguchi 1ST
The event took place at the
Girl Eelinor Goto -Dufferin Plaza Bowling Alley. 11 to 13 years:
Approximately seventy children
Boy Bruce Bando — — _ lw 8
accompanied by their parents
Girl June Tamaki — attended.
14 to 20 years:
After tallying up the bowling
boy
Kawaguchi
scores, supper, presentation of
Taguchi —
ns
trophies, and' a game of bingo
followed, as the_ scene shifted to Lowest Score:
Girl Kim Nagasuye —
the Toronto Buddhist Social Hall.
di
Boy
Ian
Izukawa
—
The following names are the
winners of each of the categ'ories. Dummy Score:
Girl Pamela Yoshida
81
Double Events:
Boy
Larry Suyama — 130
10 years & Under:
Team Champion:
Gary Tehara -------- 358
Kenny Komori
Gir] Denise Tsuruoka — 309
Jane
Tamura
11 to 13 years
s
hay
Goto
Boy Wayne Uyeda-------- 314
Kunio Suyama
Julie Suyama — — 264
Mike Uyeda
14 to 20 years:
Boy Steven Isozaki-------- 439
Debbie Suyama — — 381
Martial Arts Centre For Steveston
RICHMOND, 13.C. — The onlv
are simple linoleum, the walls
thing missing is a smiling Geiare a basic white, just as one
sha.
would expect of the architectural
But maybe it’s better there style.
aren’t any in the spanking’ new
In the centre of the U-shaped,
building in Steveston, because if building is a fenced-in courtyard,
anybody tried any funny stuff,
ited by a wooden bridge
the Geisha, would most likely over a
dry pond. Many of the
pulverise the amorous attacker shrubs
around the building and
with a judothrow or a bamboo in the
courtyard arc Japanese,
kendo shinai in the face.
There are even some bamboo
J he Martial Arts Centre, which
opened recently, is an extension
im nd sea pi ng’ costs accounted
of the Steveston
Community for a $17,000 chunk out of the
Centre.
centre’s $225.,000 cost.
It features two large, halls, one
The 10,000 square foot cen- 5 th-dan
Tsumura
specially designed for judo claswill
immediately
relieve
Thos. T. Onizui
ses and the other in which kenon
the
overworked rate centre to be located in the
Jo, the feudal Japanese art of Steveston
BARRISTER. SOL1C
Community centre next Islington and Kipling area, sometime in May.
introduced bv
i
NOTARY PU
war- door on Moncton.
rior masters of swordsmanship.
5th-dan
karate
instructor
121 RICHMOND
W.
director Fr.an Weaver
Samurai — will be taught.
Tsumura,
studied
in
Japan
in
that there are about 1,600
363-5002
691-3388 (Res.) *
It also features an architec members in the recreation pro 1969 under Sakagami Sensei,
9th-dan master and Head of the
tural style that is so convincim’! v
about 1,000 Of which
jl
.... .............................
, ..........
Shitorvu
Itosukai School Head
‘at a visitor feels like under 16.
quarters at Yokohama. .Presently | KAZUO G. OIYE Q.C. |
shoes oft once inside
Judo
have
been
runthe door.
Tsumura is the highest ranking
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
ning three and n half hours a
NOTARY PUBLIC
member
of
this
school
in
Canada.
Flanked by the two St
night Monday through Thurs2 Carlton St., Toronto
There are four main styles of
foot halls.
day. with 120 juniors, 40 sen5
Ro cm ISG5
karate in Japan: Goju; Wado;
Japanese-style iors and 25 black belts.
3
356-6388
293-4281 (Res. ■
Shotokan; and Shitorvu,
roof are i
rooihs, meetKendo cla
given every
ing- rooms
Alter the Baris tourney, Tsu
’t'k night and Sunday afterplans
to visit former
simple, the floor. noon, and about 50 junior:s and mura.
pupils, who have opened up their
RES. 231-0S63
BUS. 783-4261
30 adults are enrolled.
11
Ivy Lea Cres.
own schools in Paris, Amsterdam
3101 Bathurst St
In additioni, says Miss Weaver, and London.
JAPANESE
there are 75’ other activities at
MRS. SATOKO SATO
the
centre.
all the way from
RESTAURANT
Ail types of insurance
tinv tot tumbling to Japanese
MICHI"
Toronto 133. Ont
Phone 863-9519
.
iWH
sukiyaki
lawni
Reservations: 366-2164
Seven Days A Week
460 Dundas St. West,
Toronto, Ont.
KEG NEWS
Richmond’s recreation administrator D. G. Harwood
TORONTO NISEI MIXED MAJOR 5-PIN ■
BOWLING LEAGUE'
the centre’s design, and the
February
27,
1972.
popularit
of the two Japanese MEN:
.........
Willie Tateishi
(306)
arts of s elf defence, are attribuMike Obrovat:
814
San~o Sasaki
806
table in part to the hig’h number
Fred Morivama SOO
Peter Moura
797 (315)
of
iff in the SteMartin Hollv
794 (333)
765 (31S)
nlthoug-h more
753
than half the ce litre’s members
Armata
745
LADIES: Jov Chow
come from outsid e Steveston.
792 (296)
Tdl Sheppard
:e
Oda
One of Richmond's 1971 cen
s
w
tennial projects, the centre was
a
financed with a $95,000 pledge
March 5, 1972
IlOm the SteVOston
MEN:
s
(356)
Society, 88/, (000 from the muOl
795,
nicipnlity
of
Richmond.
7^6
and
.n hohv
$42,300 from the federal and
Sasaki ‘
Ohashi
19
provincial centennial funds.
Shinmoto
It
was
designed
MEMBER OF C.R.C.A.
SHINGLING
SHEET METAL WORK
ALCAN SIDING DEALER
TORONTO
Tosh Nishijima
421-3374
ffe//</inn ^A viM^cnS ^en/^ -
B
’ 627 BAY ST., TORONTO
It is a good policv to
have the RIGHT POLICY
Co/MUi!
William Wales Ltd. ;
Insurance Agents ’
S
J
CROWN LIFT
2 Carlton St. 10th flwi
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
Phone 368-468;
Say it with flowers!
SHARON'S FLORIST
Cm-WIDS OEUVEST
Ssss^
Peter Sasaki
Bns: HO. 6-2041
Res: HD.
942 PAPE
6-7
AVE., TORONTO
OSCAR'S
Kashino &
Weinberg
SPORT SHOP
215 Victoria St.
SKI
SPECIALIST
LADIES: C
March
MEN:
Arlene O.
Lorraine <
Terry Cic
12,
A
S.
673
665
640
Toronto
1201 Bloor Street V» esl
363-7441
LE. 2-4267
i
A
* Weekly Saturday Departures from Vancouver
* Includes Twin shr
hotel accommodation, siehtsecin
-Most .Meal . Airfare. Service Charge and Grat nit
Room and open return at additional char
e or Write for Color Brochure and Further
1972
K. iwata Travel Service
Je
a
NISEI OWNED
"Covering Ontario"
KAMPA!
TOUR
16-day group four of Orient $999.00
S5S (324)
SOO
LADIES: NT
19
£
Room 301
l~
ALL-WAY ROOFING LTD.
EAVESTROUGHING
OFFICE FORMS, BROCHURES, LETTERHi
bv
Arnulf H. Petzold who spent
a number of
practising in
Japan before moving to Canada,
and it's the irst such centre in
FLAT ROOFS
PRINTING ®ja®i
/
LADIES: Cc-dv G<
Lorraine <
ia
Arlene ~O
•05
Ph: 36S-9934
8S9 Dundas St
Toronto. Ont.
V ancouver
w.
254-5101
1115 East Hastings
Vancouver 6. B-G
1
Page 3
7.
Vida}.
1972
c A NA D
N_E W
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“MICHI” RESTAURANT
328 Queen St. W„ Toronto
PHONE 863-9519
Frank G. Yada
Gown Life Insurance Co
1550
West Georgia
Vancouver. B.C.
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1550
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PAGE 6
T H E
N E W
Friday, April 7, 1979
CANADIAN
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Page 7
FU d ay. A p ri 1 7, 19/ 2
THE
N E W
PAGE 7
G A N A D I AN
jraMSRSiOTTOmH
Dates And Doings
Reading Japan
! Personal Notes
’ bwwihibm^^
’ days stood on the lowest rung
of the social ladder (Rikyu’s
religious-philosophical- borrowing of farm utensils was
■ The
We wish to express our
TORONTO — On Saturday. April Sth at 8:00 a group of
ritual known as chano- not a humble act), but they
heartfelt
thanks to our many
-•r.M^ed voting musicians will strive to celebrate Hana Mat-suri yu. the tea ceremony, a comi gained prestige and influence by
friends
and
relatives for their
bv bringing a spring message of joy to all their friends and any plicated amalgam of manners.
kindness,
many
expressions of
! offering- to help the generals
who* hold music in their hearts. The •’'spring thing’-’ will be t.
and rules, has been prac- who. though these men possesssympathy and beautiful floral
on bv the very young to the teens of the Toronto Buddhist ticed for three centuries by busi
tributes during our recent
bereavement of our beloved
oimh and their friends. Refreshments will be served too.
nessmen, military officers, tea were deficient in the. very cul
mother well known as “ev
See you there!
— -Maya Ishiura masters, and housewives, over tural graces which the Imsibody's obachan”.
shadowing
and
overwhelming nessmen-turned-ten-masters were
$
*
*
Mr. and Mrs. George T.
the older culture of courtiers pleased to supply.
Merle Masako Shishido,
Union Service At St. Andrew's Anglican Church and lords of Japan’s Heinn age. The perfect marriage between
and
Mrs. Mitsuzo Shiga,
Mr
The ceremony has significantly
and Mrs. Harold Kimoto,
money and- mans was thus con
TORONTO. — The St. Andrew’s Anglican Church will hold its affected
architecture,
pottery,
Mr and Mrs. Mike. Hideo
secrated in Japan over a brew
monthly Union Service on April 16th at 11:30 a.m.
home life, costume, cuisine, pa
Inamoto.
The guest preacher will be the Rev. John Parson., a great inting, literature, and lacquer that had once been a sacred
Mr. and Mrs. Akio Hayashi.
G randchildren
and
Great
•’-end of Japanese people during the settlement in Toronto in early ware and has helped make- Ja elixir of the upper classes.
Grandchildren.
uts
of
tea
1940‘s. The title of his sermon is “My Impressions of Japanese pan into a nation of merchants
and militarists. A kind of na could ever write a book about
Canadian.”
The service in English will be conducted by the Rector and the tional art-hobby, tea ceremony the ceremony that moves berules and
vend the listing o
is unique to this country.
choir will sing.
to
a sensi- j
Everyone is cordially invited.
Rev. F. Miyaji
It is not surprising, therefore, live ip preci nt ion
the art itChurch cemetery visitings will follow the services on April
that when, at the war’s end,
‘active April 1st, 1972
in its technique,
23rd. 2:00 p.m. at York, Highland Memorial, Rest Haven, and
Yasunari Kawabata decided to
654-6159 (Area
requires a lifetime of study.
Pine Hill; April 30th, 2:00 p.m. at Riverdale St. James and Mt.
I
write about the grief and beauty and foreigner;
add
twenty
J
code 416)
Pleasant; May 7th, 3:00 p.m. at Parklawn, Prospect.
of
Japan,
he
made
the
tea
cere
er
to
comin
years
to
that
— Rev. Ken Imai
mony the subject of one of his
for their handicaps.
*
*
*
novels Thousand Cranes (Tut
Store will be closed
tle) ; people are only the back- for “over a year,’' Rand Castile
Montreal Dana Club Elects Nev; 1972 Executive drop. The ceremony is far* more has
until April 30, 1972.
contributed The Way ot ’1 ea
vital
than
the
fickle,
meddleso
MONTREAL. — At the General Meeting of the Montreal
(Weatherhill). an elegantly de
(Sapporo Ichiban)
me,
and
lonely
characters
who
signed book. Castile enjoys ten
Dana Club which was held recently, the following were elected to
221 Spadina Ave., Toronto
S62-1U82
the Executive Board for the 1972 term. Co-Presidents: Julie Shika- carry it on. They are but tem bowls, and loves to quote prices.
porary
figures,
like
flowers,
not
He divulges enough about the
tani and Josie Okimura; Executive Secretary: Kumi Kadohama;
so
enduring
as
the
bowls
and
tokonoma (alcove) to enable any
Recording Secretary: Amy Nakano; Treasurer: Mary Shinya;
tearooms that were somehow reader to pas: an
xamination
Lay Away Savings Treasurer: Toki Ishihara; Co-Social Conveners:
preserved
through
the
war.
The
should
that be
on the subject
Annie Shinohara and Fumi Tani; Co-Education Conveners: Chiyo
protagonist is compared to a necessarv. But. lis book is rcIshiyen and Kimi. Gekko; Membership Convener: Chiharu Miyake;
morning-glory in a gourd that markably like Sadler’s: there is
Welfare Convener: Yoshiko Sakauye; and Auditor: Miki Takahashi.
is three hundred years old and little, about the tea ceremony in
The recipients of the Montreal Dana Scholarship Funds were
signed by the founder of a tea it. It is like a book on ballet
propnewi
Mr. Rodney Ikeda and Miss Julie Takeuchi. Runner ups were Miss
school. In this novel, the cere that tells everything there is to
Carolyn Kato and Miss Brenda Sakauye. Congratulations to All!
JON ONODERA
mony and its guests depend on knows about shoos, tights, and
The Annual Dana Luncheon will be held on Sunday April 9th
one another, together creating
but omits mentioning
at the Ste. Helene de Champlain Restaurant on St. Helen’s Island.
481-8805
489-4654
something more meaningful than either the dancers or the dance.
(Residence)
For those wishing to attend, please make your reservations as soon
the desperate, world outside the
Castile’s most serious weakas possible to one of the following executives: Chiharu Miyake
hut. Kawabata should be every
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
ness
is his description of the
at 381-1976, Josie Okimura at 747-5215, or Julie Shikatani at
one’s ‘introduction to tea.
Toronto
thick-tea service, which Yasu271-6665.
— Montreal Dana Club
“It’s a great"wj^efTi-amming nosuke Fukukita, in his excellent
foreign flowers in it,” exclaims 130 Tea Cult of Japan (Japan
the tea master in the book, spy Travel Bureau’s Tourist Libra
Wetconie jup^as*® CcEadiaB Friend®
ing an ill-used1 water* jar. Fo ry), claims is the essence of tea
reigners were always threaten ceremony. The guests invited for
ing to intrude in those postwar thick tea are few and carefully
days, even popping up at cere chosen. A single bowl is passed
monies after having read The from mouth to mouth, the soupy
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
Book of Tea (Tuttle), which« tea sipped like a communion.
Kakuzo Okakura wrote in Boston Kawabata describes such a ccEM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
in 1906 to try and re-establish remony. Castile docs not, ho126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
SHOP
a reverence for tea among New wever. ‘ ‘Following the meal,” he
England intellectuals. Those were writes “ thick tea, koicha, is serv* Kronas ts Wedding Banquets. Showers and Partiee
the days when everyone talked ed after a brief intermission in
733 Danforth Ave..
Seating Capacity 240
of the yellow peril, so Okakura, the garden.” He knows how much
Toronto
defending his culture, spoke pro it costs, but apparently no t how
phetically
of
an
impending to serve it- Castile is only a
Phone Store 463-3126
master,
student,
Fukukita
is
a
“white disaster” in Asia.
Home 4 69-0293
so
his
book
is
far
more
Most of his book is a mere
Japanese Food
paste of platitudes, but it has tory.
Deliver Evenings
Fukukita, recognizing that Jasome valid insights. He explains
and Saturdays
what Japanese mean when they panese life was becoming more
say a man has tea in his blood. Western, hoped that foreigners,
Okakura’s readers, unfortunate instead of abandoning their own
ly, tended to believe in his ab culture, would use it to help
1
surd portrait of a nation of modernize the tea ceremony. He
artists and Buddhists, all medi wrote: “Those of Western birth
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
tating solemnly over bowls of and upbringing are in an advanposition to make contri
EM. 4-7692
tea. The classic size of the tea
te
the ancient Japanese
room, he asserts, w.as taken butions
—Ship—Bus—Rail
from a Buddhist sutra; and the cult of ceremonial tea.”
Anywhere — Anytime
garden path is the tea-man’s
Most likely, whoever does this
i
E1R9IIVA 460 Dundas St. W
tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
first stage of meditation — will be someone who knows exj
Toronto 2B. Ont.
Travellers Cheques
sweeping it is his Zazen.
actly who he is and who he is
Obtainable
So Westerners began trooping not, for that seems to be one
!
• RETAIL STORE 366-5451
requirement of a master.
Travel, Accident
to tearooms and the gossipy A.L.
|
Store 366-5451
Travel
Service
363-0655
Sadler attempted to further in
and Baggage Insurance
i ■ Open 7 days a week
form
them
in
his
1933
Cha-no' to serve you
• Summer tour to Japan
Call for Reservations or
yu (Tuttle), though the value of
J * )-?r’ety of Japanese Foods
Departing July 6, 1972
, • Kikkoman products
a complete genealogy of tea
368-9934
Information
• Autumn grand tour of
( • Kokuho rice
masters is as questionable -as
| • Ajinomoto products
2239 Bloor St. West
Europe
Sadler’s Niagara of tales about
i * P^nasonic rice cookers
(At Runnymede) ’Toronto
Departing mid Sept, for
them. He might instead have
| * Gift wares: magazines
Opposite
Tsukawa Barber
three weeks
disclosed that these same mas! ifarc^ lucky prize winners
K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
Phone 766-4292
irom
ters
were
descended
' i r‘ ^’ Nakada
Thinking of visiting Vanco
wealthy traders who imported
uver this summer? Call us
1
b b. II akisaka
889 Dundas St. W.,
NAMIKI & TANOUYE
for
Domestic
Travel
Arran
tea for the priests and the Kyo
»
t
Yamamoto
। - Irs. E. A. Ebisuzaki
gement.
to court. Money-handlers in .those
"Spring Thing" At Tor. Buddhist Church April 8
HYLAND
FLOWERS
KWONGCHOW
CBOP SOEY TAVERN
DUNDAS UNION STORE
OPEN SUNDAY
- 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. -
TRAVEL
Arrangements
JNT Auto Service
T, KAMEOKA
THE
N E W
PAGE 7
G A N A D I AN
jraMSRSiOTTOmH
Dates And Doings
Reading Japan
! Personal Notes
’ bwwihibm^^
’ days stood on the lowest rung
of the social ladder (Rikyu’s
religious-philosophical- borrowing of farm utensils was
■ The
We wish to express our
TORONTO — On Saturday. April Sth at 8:00 a group of
ritual known as chano- not a humble act), but they
heartfelt
thanks to our many
-•r.M^ed voting musicians will strive to celebrate Hana Mat-suri yu. the tea ceremony, a comi gained prestige and influence by
friends
and
relatives for their
bv bringing a spring message of joy to all their friends and any plicated amalgam of manners.
kindness,
many
expressions of
! offering- to help the generals
who* hold music in their hearts. The •’'spring thing’-’ will be t.
and rules, has been prac- who. though these men possesssympathy and beautiful floral
on bv the very young to the teens of the Toronto Buddhist ticed for three centuries by busi
tributes during our recent
bereavement of our beloved
oimh and their friends. Refreshments will be served too.
nessmen, military officers, tea were deficient in the. very cul
mother well known as “ev
See you there!
— -Maya Ishiura masters, and housewives, over tural graces which the Imsibody's obachan”.
shadowing
and
overwhelming nessmen-turned-ten-masters were
$
*
*
Mr. and Mrs. George T.
the older culture of courtiers pleased to supply.
Merle Masako Shishido,
Union Service At St. Andrew's Anglican Church and lords of Japan’s Heinn age. The perfect marriage between
and
Mrs. Mitsuzo Shiga,
Mr
The ceremony has significantly
and Mrs. Harold Kimoto,
money and- mans was thus con
TORONTO. — The St. Andrew’s Anglican Church will hold its affected
architecture,
pottery,
Mr and Mrs. Mike. Hideo
secrated in Japan over a brew
monthly Union Service on April 16th at 11:30 a.m.
home life, costume, cuisine, pa
Inamoto.
The guest preacher will be the Rev. John Parson., a great inting, literature, and lacquer that had once been a sacred
Mr. and Mrs. Akio Hayashi.
G randchildren
and
Great
•’-end of Japanese people during the settlement in Toronto in early ware and has helped make- Ja elixir of the upper classes.
Grandchildren.
uts
of
tea
1940‘s. The title of his sermon is “My Impressions of Japanese pan into a nation of merchants
and militarists. A kind of na could ever write a book about
Canadian.”
The service in English will be conducted by the Rector and the tional art-hobby, tea ceremony the ceremony that moves berules and
vend the listing o
is unique to this country.
choir will sing.
to
a sensi- j
Everyone is cordially invited.
Rev. F. Miyaji
It is not surprising, therefore, live ip preci nt ion
the art itChurch cemetery visitings will follow the services on April
that when, at the war’s end,
‘active April 1st, 1972
in its technique,
23rd. 2:00 p.m. at York, Highland Memorial, Rest Haven, and
Yasunari Kawabata decided to
654-6159 (Area
requires a lifetime of study.
Pine Hill; April 30th, 2:00 p.m. at Riverdale St. James and Mt.
I
write about the grief and beauty and foreigner;
add
twenty
J
code 416)
Pleasant; May 7th, 3:00 p.m. at Parklawn, Prospect.
of
Japan,
he
made
the
tea
cere
er
to
comin
years
to
that
— Rev. Ken Imai
mony the subject of one of his
for their handicaps.
*
*
*
novels Thousand Cranes (Tut
Store will be closed
tle) ; people are only the back- for “over a year,’' Rand Castile
Montreal Dana Club Elects Nev; 1972 Executive drop. The ceremony is far* more has
until April 30, 1972.
contributed The Way ot ’1 ea
vital
than
the
fickle,
meddleso
MONTREAL. — At the General Meeting of the Montreal
(Weatherhill). an elegantly de
(Sapporo Ichiban)
me,
and
lonely
characters
who
signed book. Castile enjoys ten
Dana Club which was held recently, the following were elected to
221 Spadina Ave., Toronto
S62-1U82
the Executive Board for the 1972 term. Co-Presidents: Julie Shika- carry it on. They are but tem bowls, and loves to quote prices.
porary
figures,
like
flowers,
not
He divulges enough about the
tani and Josie Okimura; Executive Secretary: Kumi Kadohama;
so
enduring
as
the
bowls
and
tokonoma (alcove) to enable any
Recording Secretary: Amy Nakano; Treasurer: Mary Shinya;
tearooms that were somehow reader to pas: an
xamination
Lay Away Savings Treasurer: Toki Ishihara; Co-Social Conveners:
preserved
through
the
war.
The
should
that be
on the subject
Annie Shinohara and Fumi Tani; Co-Education Conveners: Chiyo
protagonist is compared to a necessarv. But. lis book is rcIshiyen and Kimi. Gekko; Membership Convener: Chiharu Miyake;
morning-glory in a gourd that markably like Sadler’s: there is
Welfare Convener: Yoshiko Sakauye; and Auditor: Miki Takahashi.
is three hundred years old and little, about the tea ceremony in
The recipients of the Montreal Dana Scholarship Funds were
signed by the founder of a tea it. It is like a book on ballet
propnewi
Mr. Rodney Ikeda and Miss Julie Takeuchi. Runner ups were Miss
school. In this novel, the cere that tells everything there is to
Carolyn Kato and Miss Brenda Sakauye. Congratulations to All!
JON ONODERA
mony and its guests depend on knows about shoos, tights, and
The Annual Dana Luncheon will be held on Sunday April 9th
one another, together creating
but omits mentioning
at the Ste. Helene de Champlain Restaurant on St. Helen’s Island.
481-8805
489-4654
something more meaningful than either the dancers or the dance.
(Residence)
For those wishing to attend, please make your reservations as soon
the desperate, world outside the
Castile’s most serious weakas possible to one of the following executives: Chiharu Miyake
hut. Kawabata should be every
540 Eglinton Ave. W.
ness
is his description of the
at 381-1976, Josie Okimura at 747-5215, or Julie Shikatani at
one’s ‘introduction to tea.
Toronto
thick-tea service, which Yasu271-6665.
— Montreal Dana Club
“It’s a great"wj^efTi-amming nosuke Fukukita, in his excellent
foreign flowers in it,” exclaims 130 Tea Cult of Japan (Japan
the tea master in the book, spy Travel Bureau’s Tourist Libra
Wetconie jup^as*® CcEadiaB Friend®
ing an ill-used1 water* jar. Fo ry), claims is the essence of tea
reigners were always threaten ceremony. The guests invited for
ing to intrude in those postwar thick tea are few and carefully
days, even popping up at cere chosen. A single bowl is passed
monies after having read The from mouth to mouth, the soupy
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
Book of Tea (Tuttle), which« tea sipped like a communion.
Kakuzo Okakura wrote in Boston Kawabata describes such a ccEM. 2-0029 For Reservations EM. 2-4322
in 1906 to try and re-establish remony. Castile docs not, ho126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
SHOP
a reverence for tea among New wever. ‘ ‘Following the meal,” he
England intellectuals. Those were writes “ thick tea, koicha, is serv* Kronas ts Wedding Banquets. Showers and Partiee
the days when everyone talked ed after a brief intermission in
733 Danforth Ave..
Seating Capacity 240
of the yellow peril, so Okakura, the garden.” He knows how much
Toronto
defending his culture, spoke pro it costs, but apparently no t how
phetically
of
an
impending to serve it- Castile is only a
Phone Store 463-3126
master,
student,
Fukukita
is
a
“white disaster” in Asia.
Home 4 69-0293
so
his
book
is
far
more
Most of his book is a mere
Japanese Food
paste of platitudes, but it has tory.
Deliver Evenings
Fukukita, recognizing that Jasome valid insights. He explains
and Saturdays
what Japanese mean when they panese life was becoming more
say a man has tea in his blood. Western, hoped that foreigners,
Okakura’s readers, unfortunate instead of abandoning their own
ly, tended to believe in his ab culture, would use it to help
1
surd portrait of a nation of modernize the tea ceremony. He
artists and Buddhists, all medi wrote: “Those of Western birth
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
tating solemnly over bowls of and upbringing are in an advanposition to make contri
EM. 4-7692
tea. The classic size of the tea
te
the ancient Japanese
room, he asserts, w.as taken butions
—Ship—Bus—Rail
from a Buddhist sutra; and the cult of ceremonial tea.”
Anywhere — Anytime
garden path is the tea-man’s
Most likely, whoever does this
i
E1R9IIVA 460 Dundas St. W
tours—Hotel—Sightseeing
first stage of meditation — will be someone who knows exj
Toronto 2B. Ont.
Travellers Cheques
sweeping it is his Zazen.
actly who he is and who he is
Obtainable
So Westerners began trooping not, for that seems to be one
!
• RETAIL STORE 366-5451
requirement of a master.
Travel, Accident
to tearooms and the gossipy A.L.
|
Store 366-5451
Travel
Service
363-0655
Sadler attempted to further in
and Baggage Insurance
i ■ Open 7 days a week
form
them
in
his
1933
Cha-no' to serve you
• Summer tour to Japan
Call for Reservations or
yu (Tuttle), though the value of
J * )-?r’ety of Japanese Foods
Departing July 6, 1972
, • Kikkoman products
a complete genealogy of tea
368-9934
Information
• Autumn grand tour of
( • Kokuho rice
masters is as questionable -as
| • Ajinomoto products
2239 Bloor St. West
Europe
Sadler’s Niagara of tales about
i * P^nasonic rice cookers
(At Runnymede) ’Toronto
Departing mid Sept, for
them. He might instead have
| * Gift wares: magazines
Opposite
Tsukawa Barber
three weeks
disclosed that these same mas! ifarc^ lucky prize winners
K. IWATA TRAVEL SERVICE
Phone 766-4292
irom
ters
were
descended
' i r‘ ^’ Nakada
Thinking of visiting Vanco
wealthy traders who imported
uver this summer? Call us
1
b b. II akisaka
889 Dundas St. W.,
NAMIKI & TANOUYE
for
Domestic
Travel
Arran
tea for the priests and the Kyo
»
t
Yamamoto
। - Irs. E. A. Ebisuzaki
gement.
to court. Money-handlers in .those
"Spring Thing" At Tor. Buddhist Church April 8
HYLAND
FLOWERS
KWONGCHOW
CBOP SOEY TAVERN
DUNDAS UNION STORE
OPEN SUNDAY
- 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. -
TRAVEL
Arrangements
JNT Auto Service
T, KAMEOKA
Page 8
(Cont. from Pag* One?
Reform...
72
(Continued From Page 1)
as wholesalers of berries, in Island growers so as to eliminate able space — even between the rice paddies. Ducks and chickens
which we growers, were always pstpd
r'OnS' -1 -re^U' i and bsh were being cultivated for the market.
victimized.
estect the Market Commissioner, I
b
j i
Mr. J. A. Grant, to lecture about j
Huan^ explained how Chinese expertise was being used
Second claw mail
Competition is the mother of what was happening on the I to help the Vietnamese — instruction in live stock culture, crop
number OaSS ^88
destiuction in this particular M^rR markets- Mr. Grant and rotation, irrigation, cooperative marketing. The Land-to-the-Tiller
member of Ethnic
case. In an effort to relieve this Federal Fruit Inspector* S pro^*am’ he said- was not enough in itself. The tiller must prosper,
oi Ontario‘^
situation, several attempts were
being rpade by the Government many
..a day with me attending or ^ns ownership of the land is meaningless. In the area I saw
PUBLISHED ON EVERr TUEsrtiv
AND FRIDAY
^1
to organize the growers in 1925 Japanes
meetings throughout that day, farmers certainly seemed to be prospering.
but failed. The Japanese Berry iFraser Valley. I interpreted and
The prosperity manifests itself not in sophisticated farmfarming originated in Haney as trofl spent^f^X^te^
American-style, but in little power units like the out*:.
TSUMURA
early as 1905. We were the
English Section Editor
largest berry farming communi organizing not only the North board motor, used not only to navigate the canals and rivers, but
ty in the Fraser Valley and braser but South side. We orga- also dismounted and used as irrigation pumps, in place of the slow,
Acting English Editor
suffered the most when markets nizedlocal co-op first and then fe- old-fashioned, treadle-operated water-wheel
C. R. CHIBA
fell into chaotic condition.
deration of the locals to ship all
,
through one channel so
lhe road we drove was lined with newly harvested sacks of
KEN MORI
I studied agricultural coopera produce
that
one
.agent
can
control
whole
ri
ce.
In the. fields whole families were at work, threshing the rice
Japanese Section Editor
tion in Danish, and Canadian
« onto huge mats.
(1 compiled my study and mS^Ul’^f by hHnd’ 'V“"'inS « ’“>
479 QUEEN SI'. WEST
published in Japan a book “Co- time and a lot of patience and I
The gaoup I stopped to visit consisted of a pretty young girl
upeiative Marketing- of Agricul
Toronto 133, Ont.
However this co-opertive a^d her father and brothers. I took snaps of the group at work
tural Products in Canada and
EMpire 6-5005
U.S.A. ’ 1937). After many years dX Son? S a“v2T the X"’heh 1 X ^ a Cl0Se'UP °f fc gW' She was
of
bitter
experiences
with Japanese from losing Land owner- " lth emba^assed giggles.
merchant-grower co-operation, we ship and leaseright in B.C. politiRut her father stepped forward, and smiling lifted up her
finallv organized “Maple Ridge
'
1 stm' sunhat so that light would fall on her face. So I snapped the
Cooperative
Exchange”
which
picture.
was a genuine growers’ own co
Female Help Wanted
op in 1927. I was priviledged to Exhibition . . .
be the Managing Director for 15
indication of their enthusiasm
EXPERIENCED sales clerk Full
years.
(Continued from Page l*>
over the “Asian Canadian Ex
or part time. Oriental Bazaar
Sheridan Mall 822-8268 (Toron
^le °^?er band, anti-orien
Representatives from various perience”, they also contributed
JAMES KAMINO
to).
tal society did not forget to take parts of the U.S. and Canada to The Powell Street Review.
.advantage of the situation of
Besides jazz music, the concert
the berry market. They advocated converged solely to attend the
that the Japanese growers ship historical first. Representing To- included folk-singing and more
Auto-Fire-Life
produce indiscrimately on con ronto was Rei mi Chiba, who is poetry reading's. The evening
All Forms Of
signment all over the prairie also the co-editor of The Powell
364-9913
markets thus glutting the market Street Review, (an Asian Cana- concluded with everyone partici
INSURANCE
pating in a grand Bon Odori
one after another. Unfortunately
Consult
iTOBONTO)
it was true since the Japanese dian publication).
dance.
growers knew nothing about
A concert to wind up the
KIYO TAMURA
what was happening on the whole week’s
experiences
was
market. This was a very serious
Bus. 366-5811
matter as it concerned* the po held at the Japanese- Languag-e
Home 759-8317
cket book ot all the berry grow- School on Alexandra St. Attend
ci s as a whole. The English ing
the
concert
under
the
growers on Vancouver Island auspices of the Steveston-based
who were well organized, blamed
the Japanese on the Mainland “Wakayama’’ group and Lex
for breaking the markets -and Fukumitsu of Seattle, Washbegan planning to check the ex- ington, was an Asian American
KIMURA &
OPTOMETRISTS
pp5'0,11 °f Japanese farmers in jazz
group,
Ken
Kudota,
R.-^- “v means of legislature,
for
the
COMPLETE CARE
sundar to that of the 'State of spokesman
California, prohibiting- Japanese group said, “The positive feeling
FOR YOUR EYES
i ownership and lease right about the Asian community and
LAW OFFICE
which is life and death to the conununity culture whs neverJapanese in B.C. Something had
to be done in a hurrv and the realized to the extent that it
INSURANCE
KS-fflBflAUBr3601 Lawrence Ave. East
only way was to organize all Ja was reached here.” Kudota and
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
panese growers on the mainland: the other members of tbe band
118 West. Hastings St.
Scarborough, Ontario.
snip berries through the 'same later donated their fee toward
Phone
485-5087
VANCOUVER, B.C.
agent employed by the Vancouver
Home phone: 449-9293
the exhibition costs. As a further
Telephone: 431-1500
The New Canadian
>9
K
si
8
CLASSIFIED
T.V. Service
3
1
Hl
8
TORIC
OPTICAL
CADSBY
Gertrude Urabe
ALONPA
SMALL
SHOE
SIZES
NEW SPRING
STYLES
muscle pain relief from a plastei
i
i
Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
Albert’s Shoe Store
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
JLUMEIA,
* May 13
25
Salonpas medicated plasters soothe away aches and pains and bruise
and spiains. They contain modern active medications that nenetrme ^„
^
.
^ nap proauce warmth and relieve pain. Unlike
_deep heat liniments which quickly evaporate and lose their effectiveness.
plaster and won’t stain clothes.
Salonpas is a trusted medication in more than
50 countries
AX'A DA
Telephone (604)273-5696
t =
SALO
29
S
Japan KANK.O Tour
Special Group Tour __
SUMMER
VACATION IN EUROPE —
YOUNG JAPAN for YOUNG
CANADIAN
Reasonable Group Tour to Japan Tor
J.0!™^ 2nd or 3rd Generations.
jlslt /aPan’s Top Companies, and
Other Special Departure to Japan:
Jap
August 12, Sept. 9, October 8 and November 4.
Please contact for detail information.
the place to start your happy HOLIDAY
Reform...
72
(Continued From Page 1)
as wholesalers of berries, in Island growers so as to eliminate able space — even between the rice paddies. Ducks and chickens
which we growers, were always pstpd
r'OnS' -1 -re^U' i and bsh were being cultivated for the market.
victimized.
estect the Market Commissioner, I
b
j i
Mr. J. A. Grant, to lecture about j
Huan^ explained how Chinese expertise was being used
Second claw mail
Competition is the mother of what was happening on the I to help the Vietnamese — instruction in live stock culture, crop
number OaSS ^88
destiuction in this particular M^rR markets- Mr. Grant and rotation, irrigation, cooperative marketing. The Land-to-the-Tiller
member of Ethnic
case. In an effort to relieve this Federal Fruit Inspector* S pro^*am’ he said- was not enough in itself. The tiller must prosper,
oi Ontario‘^
situation, several attempts were
being rpade by the Government many
..a day with me attending or ^ns ownership of the land is meaningless. In the area I saw
PUBLISHED ON EVERr TUEsrtiv
AND FRIDAY
^1
to organize the growers in 1925 Japanes
meetings throughout that day, farmers certainly seemed to be prospering.
but failed. The Japanese Berry iFraser Valley. I interpreted and
The prosperity manifests itself not in sophisticated farmfarming originated in Haney as trofl spent^f^X^te^
American-style, but in little power units like the out*:.
TSUMURA
early as 1905. We were the
English Section Editor
largest berry farming communi organizing not only the North board motor, used not only to navigate the canals and rivers, but
ty in the Fraser Valley and braser but South side. We orga- also dismounted and used as irrigation pumps, in place of the slow,
Acting English Editor
suffered the most when markets nizedlocal co-op first and then fe- old-fashioned, treadle-operated water-wheel
C. R. CHIBA
fell into chaotic condition.
deration of the locals to ship all
,
through one channel so
lhe road we drove was lined with newly harvested sacks of
KEN MORI
I studied agricultural coopera produce
that
one
.agent
can
control
whole
ri
ce.
In the. fields whole families were at work, threshing the rice
Japanese Section Editor
tion in Danish, and Canadian
« onto huge mats.
(1 compiled my study and mS^Ul’^f by hHnd’ 'V“"'inS « ’“>
479 QUEEN SI'. WEST
published in Japan a book “Co- time and a lot of patience and I
The gaoup I stopped to visit consisted of a pretty young girl
upeiative Marketing- of Agricul
Toronto 133, Ont.
However this co-opertive a^d her father and brothers. I took snaps of the group at work
tural Products in Canada and
EMpire 6-5005
U.S.A. ’ 1937). After many years dX Son? S a“v2T the X"’heh 1 X ^ a Cl0Se'UP °f fc gW' She was
of
bitter
experiences
with Japanese from losing Land owner- " lth emba^assed giggles.
merchant-grower co-operation, we ship and leaseright in B.C. politiRut her father stepped forward, and smiling lifted up her
finallv organized “Maple Ridge
'
1 stm' sunhat so that light would fall on her face. So I snapped the
Cooperative
Exchange”
which
picture.
was a genuine growers’ own co
Female Help Wanted
op in 1927. I was priviledged to Exhibition . . .
be the Managing Director for 15
indication of their enthusiasm
EXPERIENCED sales clerk Full
years.
(Continued from Page l*>
over the “Asian Canadian Ex
or part time. Oriental Bazaar
Sheridan Mall 822-8268 (Toron
^le °^?er band, anti-orien
Representatives from various perience”, they also contributed
JAMES KAMINO
to).
tal society did not forget to take parts of the U.S. and Canada to The Powell Street Review.
.advantage of the situation of
Besides jazz music, the concert
the berry market. They advocated converged solely to attend the
that the Japanese growers ship historical first. Representing To- included folk-singing and more
Auto-Fire-Life
produce indiscrimately on con ronto was Rei mi Chiba, who is poetry reading's. The evening
All Forms Of
signment all over the prairie also the co-editor of The Powell
364-9913
markets thus glutting the market Street Review, (an Asian Cana- concluded with everyone partici
INSURANCE
pating in a grand Bon Odori
one after another. Unfortunately
Consult
iTOBONTO)
it was true since the Japanese dian publication).
dance.
growers knew nothing about
A concert to wind up the
KIYO TAMURA
what was happening on the whole week’s
experiences
was
market. This was a very serious
Bus. 366-5811
matter as it concerned* the po held at the Japanese- Languag-e
Home 759-8317
cket book ot all the berry grow- School on Alexandra St. Attend
ci s as a whole. The English ing
the
concert
under
the
growers on Vancouver Island auspices of the Steveston-based
who were well organized, blamed
the Japanese on the Mainland “Wakayama’’ group and Lex
for breaking the markets -and Fukumitsu of Seattle, Washbegan planning to check the ex- ington, was an Asian American
KIMURA &
OPTOMETRISTS
pp5'0,11 °f Japanese farmers in jazz
group,
Ken
Kudota,
R.-^- “v means of legislature,
for
the
COMPLETE CARE
sundar to that of the 'State of spokesman
California, prohibiting- Japanese group said, “The positive feeling
FOR YOUR EYES
i ownership and lease right about the Asian community and
LAW OFFICE
which is life and death to the conununity culture whs neverJapanese in B.C. Something had
to be done in a hurrv and the realized to the extent that it
INSURANCE
KS-fflBflAUBr3601 Lawrence Ave. East
only way was to organize all Ja was reached here.” Kudota and
Office, 43 Eglinton Ave. East
panese growers on the mainland: the other members of tbe band
118 West. Hastings St.
Scarborough, Ontario.
snip berries through the 'same later donated their fee toward
Phone
485-5087
VANCOUVER, B.C.
agent employed by the Vancouver
Home phone: 449-9293
the exhibition costs. As a further
Telephone: 431-1500
The New Canadian
>9
K
si
8
CLASSIFIED
T.V. Service
3
1
Hl
8
TORIC
OPTICAL
CADSBY
Gertrude Urabe
ALONPA
SMALL
SHOE
SIZES
NEW SPRING
STYLES
muscle pain relief from a plastei
i
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Ladies’ shoes from
1 up to 11
Men’s Scott McHales
4 up to 14
Albert’s Shoe Store
1328 Queen St. West
Phone LE. 1-1931, Toronto
JLUMEIA,
* May 13
25
Salonpas medicated plasters soothe away aches and pains and bruise
and spiains. They contain modern active medications that nenetrme ^„
^
.
^ nap proauce warmth and relieve pain. Unlike
_deep heat liniments which quickly evaporate and lose their effectiveness.
plaster and won’t stain clothes.
Salonpas is a trusted medication in more than
50 countries
AX'A DA
Telephone (604)273-5696
t =
SALO
29
S
Japan KANK.O Tour
Special Group Tour __
SUMMER
VACATION IN EUROPE —
YOUNG JAPAN for YOUNG
CANADIAN
Reasonable Group Tour to Japan Tor
J.0!™^ 2nd or 3rd Generations.
jlslt /aPan’s Top Companies, and
Other Special Departure to Japan:
Jap
August 12, Sept. 9, October 8 and November 4.
Please contact for detail information.
the place to start your happy HOLIDAY